The Works of Lord Byron, Volumen 9J. Murray, 1922 |
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Página 6
... verse , the world will be decently drawn upon for its paper - money and patience . Besides all this , my Imitation of Horace is gasping for the press at Cawthorn's , but I am hesitating as to the how and the when , the single or the ...
... verse , the world will be decently drawn upon for its paper - money and patience . Besides all this , my Imitation of Horace is gasping for the press at Cawthorn's , but I am hesitating as to the how and the when , the single or the ...
Página 22
... verse- Ον γὰρ φιλεῖ θεὸς ἀποθνήσκει νέος . Plautus gives it thus ( Bacchides , iv . 7 ) — " Quem di diligunt adolescens moritur . " 2. The word is said to be illegible , and the conclusion of the letter to be lost ( Memoir of the Rev ...
... verse- Ον γὰρ φιλεῖ θεὸς ἀποθνήσκει νέος . Plautus gives it thus ( Bacchides , iv . 7 ) — " Quem di diligunt adolescens moritur . " 2. The word is said to be illegible , and the conclusion of the letter to be lost ( Memoir of the Rev ...
Página 44
... verse of the " Good Night . " 3 I have no reason to suppose my dog better than his brother brutes , mankind ; and Argus we know to be a fable . The Cosmopolite was an acquisition 1. That is , with his Travels in Albania , in part of ...
... verse of the " Good Night . " 3 I have no reason to suppose my dog better than his brother brutes , mankind ; and Argus we know to be a fable . The Cosmopolite was an acquisition 1. That is , with his Travels in Albania , in part of ...
Página 54
... verse to all your late communications ; and though I am invading your ease again , I don't know why , or what to put down that you are not acquainted with already . I am growing nervous ( how you will laugh ! ) — but it is true ...
... verse to all your late communications ; and though I am invading your ease again , I don't know why , or what to put down that you are not acquainted with already . I am growing nervous ( how you will laugh ! ) — but it is true ...
Página 59
... verses , including lines to Whyte , himself a poet , the publication of which , in the Anthologia Hibernica ( October , 1793 ; February , March , and June , 1794 ) , gained him a local reputation . Coming to London in 1799 , he read law ...
... verses , including lines to Whyte , himself a poet , the publication of which , in the Anthologia Hibernica ( October , 1793 ; February , March , and June , 1794 ) , gained him a local reputation . Coming to London in 1799 , he read law ...
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acquaintance Address admiration afterwards answer Augusta Leigh beautiful believe Bride of Abydos Brummell called Cambridge Canto Childe Harold copy Covent Garden DEAR SIR,-I Detached Thoughts Drury Lane edition English Bards favour February feel Francis Hodgson Giaour happy hear heard Hobhouse honour hope Horace House James Wedderburn James Wedderburn Webster James's Street John Hanson John Murray July June Lady Caroline Lamb least letter lines lived London Lord Byron Lord Holland Lordship Madame de Staël married Memoirs Miss Moore's never Newstead Abbey night November opinion passage perhaps person pleasure poem poet poetry praise Pray present Prince printed published R. C. Dallas Review Rogers Scott Scrope sent Sept Sheridan sincere stanza sure talents talk tell thing Thomas Moore told town verse wish write written wrote